Influence of light quality on in vitro growth and essential-oil composition of Chenopodium ambrosioides L.

Jose Eduardo Brasil P. Pinto, Alexandre Alves de Carvalho, Suzan Kelly Vilela Bertolucci

DOI Number
-
First page
81
Last page

Abstract


Chenopodium ambrosioides L. (CA) is a medicinal plant extensively used for its anthelmintic, anti-inflammatory, antileishmanial and antidiarrheal properties. One of the most important factors that regulates the growth and development of plants in vitro is light. Therefore, the aim of this study was to determine how spectral composition of light influences in vitro growth and chemical composition of CA essential oil (EO). To do that, nodal segments of CA were inoculated in a growth medium and cultured for 40 days in a growth room with different diodes emitting lights: blue (B), red (R), white (W), combinations of blue and red (B:R=1:1; 2:1; 1:2, respectively) and cool white fluorescent lamp (F). The chemical profiles of CAplant specimens grown under lights of different quality were mutually compared using principal component analysis (PCA). The results of PCA showed significant light-quality-related variations in EO profiles (Fig. 1): monochromatic B light inhibited the biosynthesis of ascaridole, while W, B:R=1:2 and 2:1 lights promoted ascaridole production. The herein obtained results suggest that explants kept in a growth room with W or B:R=2:1 lights had optimal chemical profiles

Keywords

medicinal plant, blue light, red light, micropropagation

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References


Silva, S.T. et al., 2017. Plant Cell Tiss. Organ. 129, 501–510.


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ISSN 0354-4656 (print)

ISSN 2406-0879 (online)